The older generation has used up most of the lifetime emissions budget that the younger generation would need to survive in future, says a Carbon Brief study. So, a person born today will have only an eighth of the lifetime emissions to burn compared to that of a person born in 1950, under a warming scenario of 1.5C. By conflating historical data on emissions, population and location, each person’s lifetime “carbon budget” was calculated.
According to the study, the lifetime carbon budget of an average American born in 1946 is 1,551 tonnes compared to 197 tonnes for someone born in 2017. And just 18 tonnes for a child born in India in 2017, reported Gizmodo.
About The Author
You may also like
The Great LPG Divide: India’s Gas Cylinder Market Splits in Two
Odisha Shows the Economic Cost of Hidden Climate Losses
Weeks Into the West Asia Crisis, How Is India Really Doing?
Beyond Capacity: Unlocking the Full Potential of India’s Clean Energy
West Asia Shock Ripples Through India’s Kitchens, Factories, and Supply Chains

